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+ Chapter 2. Installation
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+
+Chapter 2. Installation
+
+Table of Contents
+
+Installing from sources
+
+ Getting the source code
+ Requirements
+ (optional) MySQL setup
+ Compiling and installing
+
+Configuring Matita
+
+Installing from sources
+
+Currently, the only intended way to install Matita is starting from its source
+code.
+
+Getting the source code
+
+You can get the Matita source code in two ways:
+
+ 1. go to the download page and get the latest released source tarball;
+
+ 2. get the development sources from our SVN repository. You will need the
+ components/ and matita/ directories from the trunk/helm/software/
+ directory, plus the configure and Makefile* stuff from the same directory.
+
+ In this case you will need to run autoconf before proceding with the
+ building instructions below.
+
+Requirements
+
+In order to build Matita from sources you will need some tools and libraries.
+They are listed below.
+
+Note for Debian (and derivatives) users
+
+If you are running a Debian GNU/Linux distribution, or any of its derivative
+like Ubuntu, you can use APT to install all the required tools and libraries
+since they are all part of the Debian archive.
+
+apt-get install ocaml ocaml-findlib libgdome2-ocaml-dev liblablgtk2-ocaml-dev
+liblablgtkmathview-ocaml-dev liblablgtksourceview-ocaml-dev
+libsqlite3-ocaml-dev libocamlnet-ocaml-dev libzip-ocaml-dev libhttp-ocaml-dev
+ocaml-ulex08 libexpat-ocaml-dev libmysql-ocaml-dev camlp5
+
+An official debian package is going to be added to the archive too.
+
+Required tools and libraries
+
+OCaml
+
+ the Objective Caml compiler, version 3.09 or above
+
+Findlib
+
+ OCaml package manager, version 1.1.1 or above
+
+OCaml Expat
+
+ OCaml bindings for the expat library
+
+GMetaDOM
+
+ OCaml bindings for the Gdome 2 library
+
+OCaml HTTP
+
+ OCaml library to write HTTP daemons (and clients)
+
+LablGTK
+
+ OCaml bindings for the GTK+ library , version 2.6.0 or above
+
+GtkMathView , LablGtkMathView
+
+ GTK+ widget to render MathML documents and its OCaml bindings
+
+GtkSourceView , LablGtkSourceView
+
+ extension for the GTK+ text widget (adding the typical features of source
+ code editors) and its OCaml bindings
+
+MySQL , OCaml MySQL
+
+ SQL database and OCaml bindings for its client-side library
+
+ The SQL database itself is not strictly needed to run Matita, but the
+ client libraries are.
+
+Sqlite , OCaml Sqlite3
+
+ Sqlite database and OCaml bindings
+
+Ocamlnet
+
+ collection of OCaml libraries to deal with application-level Internet
+ protocols and conventions
+
+ulex
+
+ Unicode lexer generator for OCaml
+
+CamlZip
+
+ OCaml library to access .gz files
+
+(optional) MySQL setup
+
+To fully exploit Matita indexing and search capabilities on a huge metadata set
+you may need a working MySQL database. Detalied instructions on how to do it
+can be found in the MySQL documentation. Here you can find a quick howto.
+
+In order to create a database you need administrator permissions on your MySQL
+installation, usually the root account has them. Once you have the permissions,
+a new database can be created executing mysqladmin create matita (matita is the
+default database name, you can change it using the db.user key of the
+configuration file).
+
+Then you need to grant the necessary access permissions to the database user of
+Matita, typing echo "grant all privileges on matita.* to helm;" | mysql matita
+should do the trick (helm is the default user name used by Matita to access the
+database, you can change it using the db.user key of the configuration file).
+
+Note
+
+This way you create a database named matita on which anyone claiming to be the
+helm user can do everything (like adding dummy data or destroying the contained
+one). It is strongly suggested to apply more fine grained permissions, how to
+do it is out of the scope of this manual.
+
+Compiling and installing
+
+Once you get the source code the installations steps should be quite familiar.
+
+First of all you need to configure the build process executing ./configure.
+This will check that all needed tools and library are installed and prepare the
+sources for compilation and installation.
+
+Quite a few (optional) arguments may be passed to the configure command line to
+change build time parameters. They are listed below, together with their
+default values:
+
+configure command line arguments
+
+--with-runtime-dir=dir
+
+ (Default: /usr/local/matita) Runtime base directory where all Matita stuff
+ (executables, configuration files, standard library, ...) will be installed
+
+--with-dbhost=host
+
+ (Default: localhost) Default SQL server hostname. Will be used while
+ building the standard library during the installation and to create the
+ default Matita configuration. May be changed later in configuration file.
+
+--enable-debug
+
+ (Default: disabled) Enable debugging code. Not for the casual user.
+
+Then you will manage the build and install process using make as usual. Below
+are reported the targets you have to invoke in sequence to build and install:
+
+make targets
+
+world
+
+ builds components needed by Matita and Matita itself (in bytecode or native
+ code depending on the availability of the OCaml native code compiler)
+
+install
+
+ installs Matita related tools, standard library and the needed runtime
+ stuff in the proper places on the filesystem.
+
+ As a part of the installation process the Matita standard library will be
+ compiled, thus testing that the just built matitac compiler works properly.
+
+ For this step you will need a working SQL database (for indexing the
+ standard library while you are compiling it). See Database setup for
+ instructions on how to set it up.
+
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